Sunday

The hidden island of addiction: the insula

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6T0V-4TV7YN7-1&_user=861681&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000046147&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=861681&md5=b3ea3c7a109c3a9a240e449c20c921bd

Trends in Neurosciences
Volume 32, Issue 1, January 2009, Pages 56-67

Review

The hidden island of addiction: the insula

Nasir H. Naqvi and Antoine Bechara

Most prior research on the neurobiology of addiction has focused on the role of subcortical systems, such as the amygdala, the ventral striatum and mesolimbic dopamine system, in promoting the motivation to seek drugs.

Recent evidence indicates that a largely overlooked structure, the insula, plays a crucial part in conscious urges to take drugs.

The insula has been highlighted as a region that integrates interoceptive (i.e. bodily) states into conscious feelings and into decision-making processes that involve uncertain risk and reward.

Here, we propose a model in which the processing of the interoceptive effects of drug use by the insula contributes to conscious drug urges and to decision-making processes that precipitate relapse.


Thumbnail image

Figure 1. A schematic model of how the interoceptive functions of the insula contribute to the motivation to use drugs. (a) The insula represents the interoceptive effects of drug-use rituals. This gives rise to a specific subjective quality of the drug-use ritual, which includes conscious appreciation of interoceptive effects in addition to pleasure and satiety (i.e. reward). Dopamine (DA) release, stimulated by the central effects of the drug, might modulate the reward derived from the interoceptive effects of drug use and also drives the learning process by which these effects become both pleasurable and desirable. (b) Exposure to environmental cues (e.g. the sight of drug paraphernalia) reactivates representations of the interoceptive effects of the drug-use ritual via the VMPFC and the amygdala. This gives rise to a subjective feeling of conscious urge that is rooted in a memory for these the interoceptive effects. This representation feeds into the nucleus accumbens (NAcc), which plays a part in initiating and invigorating motivated actions or reward seeking. In concert with the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), which focuses attention and holds representations of specific goals in mind, this process gives rise to a goal-directed action to initiate the specific drug-use ritual, the interoceptive effects of which are currently represented within the insula. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) plays a part in conscious feelings of urge both by integrating representations of interoceptive states within the insula with representations of objects in the environment that triggered these states and by monitoring conflict between drug use and other, competing goals. Physiological signals related to drug withdrawal might also modulate these processes via the insula.




Table 1. 

Functional imaging studies demonstrating activity in the insula during drug urgesa

View table in article
a All are studies of cue-induced urges, except Ref. [134], which is a study of abstinence-induced urges.
b Abbreviations: ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; HF, hippocampal formation; L, left; OFC, orbitofrontal cortex; R, right; VS, ventral striatum.
c Indicates correlation with self-reported urges. Note that activity in the insula is frequently correlated with subjective urges. Also note the paucity of activation in subcortical structures, which indicates that conscious urges mediated by the insula might be dissociable from processes mediated by these subcortical regions.

No comments: